Chicago and the Making From American Modernism is the first full-length study of the vexed relationship in between America’s excellent modernist writers and the country’s “second city.” Michelle E. Moore checks out the ways in which the specifying authors of the era-Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner and F. Scott Fitzgerald-engaged with the city and responded versus the business designs of “Chicago realism” to pursue their own, European-influenced mode of modernist art. Making use of local archives to illuminate the literary culture of early 20 th-century Chicago, this book reveals a crucial brand-new measurement to the increase of American modernism.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Chicago and the Making of American Modernism, Cather, Hemingway, Faulkner, and Fitzgerald in Conflict
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